You oversee sales, marketing, and revenue across rooms, food and beverage, meetings, and spa. The spreadsheet tracks rooms well because room data arrives clean and daily from the PMS. Everything else lands late, by hand, or not at all, so the picture your team acts on is a room picture wearing a total revenue label.
Decisions then optimize the part of the business you can see and ignore the part you cannot. Rooms are often only 60 to 70% of what a full-service hotel earns, so a third of your business is decided in the dark. A meeting block looks like a win on the rooms line while quietly displacing higher-margin corporate stays and tying up function space you could have sold better. You booked revenue. You lost profit. The spreadsheet reported neither, so nobody in the room argued against the block.
Sales keeps its pipeline. Marketing keeps its campaign results. Revenue keeps its pickup. Each version is honest, and no two of them match, so the Monday meeting spends its first 20 minutes deciding whose number is real rather than what to do next.
Time spent reconciling is time not spent forecasting. Worse, each function optimizes its own target, so marketing drives volume that revenue would have priced at a higher price, and sales close groups that revenue would have declined. Nobody is wrong inside their silo. The group is wrong across it, and the cost of being wrong across it never lands on one person's report.
The spreadsheet updates once a week, usually after somebody rebuilds it on a Sunday night. By the time the team sees a shift in demand, the window to price it has already closed. You react to the week behind you instead of pricing the week ahead.
A rooms-only, backward-looking file also gives you no forward forecast to plan against. You cannot line up campaigns, groups, and staffing against demand you cannot yet see, so the fifty-thousand-euro opportunity your revenue manager should be finding stays buried under the reconciliation work that fills the week. The team is busy. The team is also blind. More on this: You Own the Number. You Don't Own the Levers.
Add it up. A commercial team spends 12 to 15 hours a week assembling and checking these files, amounting to several hundred hours of skilled labor on janitorial work before a single decision is made. Then add the margin you lose every time a decision lands three days late, on every soft midweek you fill too cheaply, and every peak you never protect. Neither number appears on a report, so the cost keeps growing precisely because nobody can point to it.
The cost is real and measurable. Classic Norway Hotels cut spreadsheet use by around 95 percent after moving to a single shared system, and one Nordic group freed roughly 4,800 hours a year that had previously been lost to manual reconciliation. Those hours were never free; they were the price of comfort, paid every week.
You do not need a new system to start today. You need to stop letting the spreadsheet set the ceiling.
Do those three things, and the spreadsheet stops being the thing your commercial strategy quietly bends around.
The verdict is simple. The spreadsheet still works, and the comfort it buys is the most expensive line in your commercial budget, because it hides the rooms you underpriced, the groups you should have declined, and the forecast you never built.
Demand Calendar puts rooms, food and beverage, meetings, and spa on one live forecast that the whole commercial team reads, so the weekly meeting starts at the decision instead of the argument.
Book a Strategy Call. We rebuild one month of your own numbers, rooms through spa, on a single forecast, so you see the leak in your data before you change anything.